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Office of Water NIS Activities and Concerns

Office of Water NIS Activities and Concerns. Diane Regas Deputy Assistant Administrator for Water U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Nonindigenous Species Workshop July 12 & 13, 2000 Washington, DC. NIS Activities and Concerns. Nonindigenous species are serious business

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Office of Water NIS Activities and Concerns

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  1. Office of Water NIS Activities and Concerns Diane Regas Deputy Assistant Administrator for Water U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Nonindigenous Species Workshop July 12 & 13, 2000 Washington, DC

  2. NIS Activities and Concerns • Nonindigenous species are serious business • Tools the Office of Water uses • Regulatory • Grants • Inter-agency Coordination • Partnerships with Private Sector • Our activities include prevention, restoration • We need good science to do our job

  3. BALLAST WATER Uniform National Discharge Standards (UNDS) • We are currently writing regulations on standards for Armed Forces vessels discharges, including ballast water, hull cleaning and antifouling paint. • Although UNDS applies only to Armed Forces vessels, it may pave the way for technology that can be used on all vessels.

  4. BALLAST WATER Petition to Regulate Ballast Water • In response, we have been studying • implications, • chances of success, and • “side-effects” • technological limitations • gaps in knowledge • gaps in current regulation.

  5. BALLAST WATER Petition to Regulate Ballast Water • Some early areas of consensus: • The threat is real, and is appropriate for EPA to address • The Clean Water Act does provide EPA with some authority, at least in some circumstances. • The biggest impediment: the lack of effective treatment technologies. • EPA should encourage the rapid development of these technologies, and help to implement them.

  6. BALLAST WATER Other regulation • Coast Guard regulations came out recently. • EPA is working with Coast Guard and ANS Task Force to develop effective standards • International Maritime Organization is working on an international ballast water treaty. EPA is on the U.S. Delegation. • Several States recently passed ballast water laws. Other state legislatures are considering it.

  7. OTHER FEDERAL ACTIVITIES Invasive Species Council • “National Invasive Species Management Plan” Aquatic Nuisance Species Task Force • Coordinates many Federal governmental NIS efforts. • Focus shifting from mostly research to action • Task Force committees, eg • Mediterranean Caulerpa taxifolia • Ballast Water and Shipping Committee • Regional Panels

  8. NEPS AND NIS • 28 NEPs are national watershed management models • 1997: 9 NEPS identified NIS as high or medium priority; • NEPs designated NIS as 1 of 7 key management issues

  9. NEPS AND NIS (cont.) • NEPS have: • Funded research on impacts of a major NIS, Atlantic Cordgrass, on native grasses and two endangered bird species in San Francisco Estuary • Funded research that evaluated shoreside treatment of ballast water

  10. NEPS AND NIS (cont.) • NEP headquarters staff: • served on workgroup that planned regional and this national workshop • serve on inter-agency NIS Council workgroups • are currently exploring potential for a mini-grant program to support NEP NIS initiatives

  11. NEPS AND NIS (cont.) • San Francisco Estuary • 95%-99% of Bay Organisms are Non-native • NIS is 1 of 10 top priorities • Estimated $2.4M/Year Cost of Responding to NIS • NEP Sits on Western Regional Panel of Aquatic Nuisance Species Task Force

  12. NEPS AND NIS (cont.) • Indian River Lagoon • 3 Exotic Plant Species: • Brazilian Pepper, • Australian pine, • maleleuca tree • Control is Very Costly • Activities of NEP Include: • volunteer “Pepper Busts”, • beach & lagoon clean-up days

  13. WETLANDS RESTORATION • EPA Work on CWAP Goal • Participate in Five Star Grant Program • Supports community-led NIS restoration projects • Examples: Grants to Caddo Native American Tribe, Communities in Colorado, Arizona, Texas, Idaho, Oregon • Wetlands Division approach: support restoration to level at or near naturally-functioning, healthy ecosystem

  14. BIOCRITERIA • We strongly support state biocriteria development • Biocriteria provide states with WQ standards benchmarks • Work with states to develop biocriteria

  15. AQUACULTURE • We have begun preparation of Aquaculture Effluent Guidelines • How, if at all, should we address NIS in these Guidelines? • Stakeholders comments: • all facilities potentially have escapees • problem in fresh water as well as the marine environment.

  16. TMDLs • 26 water bodies in 5 states are impaired from “Exotic Species” • More than 800 waters listed as impaired from “Noxious Aquatic Plants” (alien or native) • CA recently listed some waters of SF Bay as impaired by invasive species

  17. WATER DIVERSIONS • Water transfers/diversions are potential pathways for invasives • EPA is evaluating how to address water diversions that transfer chemical pollutants • Some proposed water diversions may provide new NIS pathways

  18. RESEARCH NEEDS • Major Research Needs • Efficacy and costs of prevention options, monitoring activities, control programs • NIS vector sources • Habitat vulnerability to NIS • Treatment technologies

  19. CONCLUSION • NIS are a major environmental problem • We are devoting resources and attention to NIS prevention and restoration • Research will play a vital role • We welcome the opportunity to work closely with ORD in developing an NIS research agenda

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